Instructions A pedometer treats walking 2,000 steps as walking 1 mile. It assumes that one step is a bit over 18 inches (1 mile = 36630 inches, so the pedometers assume that one step should be 18.315 inches). Note: we know 1 mile does not equal 36630 inches. Please use these numbers provided. Let's customize this calculation to account for the size of our stride. Write a function steps_to_miles () whose input is the number of steps and the length of the step in inches (an integer and a float respectively). The function should return the number of miles walked (the returned value should be a float; do not round the value here). Note that we do not want to assume that everyone's step should be 18.315 inches, which is why we are asking the user to input the length of their step as a separate value - the second parameter in our function. Write a program to collect the user input, call the function, and output the result as specified below with two digits after the decimal point (remember that you can use f-strings for that using print (f'{your_value: .2f}')). Example If the input is: 5345 18.315 the output of the program is: You walked 5345 steps which are about 2.67 miles. Troubleshooting If you are getting TypeError: unsupported operand type (s), check that you are returning the correct object of the correct type.
Instructions A pedometer treats walking 2,000 steps as walking 1 mile. It assumes that one step is a bit over 18 inches (1 mile = 36630 inches, so the pedometers assume that one step should be 18.315 inches). Note: we know 1 mile does not equal 36630 inches. Please use these numbers provided. Let's customize this calculation to account for the size of our stride. Write a function steps_to_miles () whose input is the number of steps and the length of the step in inches (an integer and a float respectively). The function should return the number of miles walked (the returned value should be a float; do not round the value here). Note that we do not want to assume that everyone's step should be 18.315 inches, which is why we are asking the user to input the length of their step as a separate value - the second parameter in our function. Write a program to collect the user input, call the function, and output the result as specified below with two digits after the decimal point (remember that you can use f-strings for that using print (f'{your_value: .2f}')). Example If the input is: 5345 18.315 the output of the program is: You walked 5345 steps which are about 2.67 miles. Troubleshooting If you are getting TypeError: unsupported operand type (s), check that you are returning the correct object of the correct type.
Database System Concepts
7th Edition
ISBN:9780078022159
Author:Abraham Silberschatz Professor, Henry F. Korth, S. Sudarshan
Publisher:Abraham Silberschatz Professor, Henry F. Korth, S. Sudarshan
Chapter1: Introduction
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 1PE
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